Gilbert v. Parrott

182 S.W. 859, 168 Ky. 599, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 609
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 859 (Gilbert v. Parrott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Parrott, 182 S.W. 859, 168 Ky. 599, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 609 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Couet by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

About thirty years ago, the exact date not being shown by the record, Wallace Gilbert died intestate, residing in Knox county, Kentucky. He left surviving him as his only heirs the appellants, Mary J. Gilbert, his widow; Samuel J. Gilbert, John Gilbert, Susan Gilbert and Mary J. Black (nee Gilbert). The latter is the wife of appellant, James T. Black. It is claimed in the petition that at the time of the death of Wallace Gilbert, he was the owner of a tract of land in Knox county, situated on Big Richland creek and described as follows: “Beginning at a beech in the upper corner of land now owned by Peter Hammons; thence east 80 poles to a stake; thence south 250 poles to a stake; thence west 80 poles to another line of land formerly owned by the said Hammons; thence to the beginning and containing about 100 acres.”

As the heirs of this land -the appellants filed this suit in the Knox circuit court on the 19th day of May, 1911, against appellee, Charles. Parrott, in which they allege that the defendant had committed trespass upon said tract of land by going thereon and cutting timber and appropriating it to his own use, and alleging that the amount of timber so taken was $300.00, for which they prayed judgment against him. The answer is a traverse of the petition and especially so as to the plaintiff’s ownership of the land from which the timber was taken, and in a second paragraph it is alleged that the defendánt was himself the owner of the land from which he took the timber, both by title from the Commonwealth and -by. adverse possession. These allegations [601]*601were denied, and upon the trial, in which a great deal of testimony was taken, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and complaining of this, this appeal is prosecuted.

Many errors are urged before us as grounds for a reversal, but according to the view which we take of this record, a number of them will not require consideration.

In an effort to establish their title to the tract of land, the plaintiffs introduced a patent issued by the Commonwealth of Kentucky to William North on the first day of June, 1797, which patent covered a survey supposed to contain 5,000 acres. For several years after the issuing of such patent, the patentee, North, failed to pay taxes on the land, and for the purpose of collecting the unpaid taxes 2,500 acres of this tract was sold on the 23rd day of November, 1804,' by the then register of the land office, John Adair, at which sale one John Ballinger became the purchaser of the 2,500 acres sold. He assigned his bid to one John Logan, and the latter again assigned it to one John Bigal, and on September 2, 1817, John W. Foster, who was then register of the land office of the State of Kentucky, executed a deed to John Bigal for the 2,500 acres of land, and the tract of land involved in this suit is a part of this 2,500 acres. John Bigal deeded to Peter Hammons the tract of land in controversy on the 28th day of June, 1830, and the description in such deed is exactly as it is in the petition as copied above. Previously to the execution of this deed from John Bigal to Peter Ham-mons, the latter had purchased other lands from Henry Banks, which adjoined the Bigal land on the west. This deed from Banks to Hammons was of date December 6, 1824, and the description of the land therein is as follows: “Beginning at a hickory and running thence 42 E. 50 poles to another hickory; thence N. 24 E. 32 poles to a stake; thence N. 15 E. 36 poles to a stake; thence N. 25 W. 112 poles to a poplar and lynn; thence N. 87 E. 40 poles to a beech; thence S. 8 E. 157 poles to a stake; thence to the beginning; thence from the poplar and lynn N. 267 poles to a stake; thence E. 20 poles to a stake; thence S. 2 E. 264 poles to a stake called for in the above square on the beginning of the same.” It will be noticed that the fifth call in the deed of Banks to Hammons reads: “Thence north 87 east 40 poles to [602]*602a Beech,” and the succeeding, or sixth call, is: “Thence south 8 degrees, east 157 poles to a stake,” followed by the last call running- to- the beginning. It will also be noticed that in the Banks deed there is a second tract of land conveyed to Hammons beginning at the “poplar and lynn corner” mentioned in the first tract described in that deed.

This controversy arises principally over the location of the beginning point in the description of the land conveyed on June 28,1830, by John Kigal to Peter Ham-mons. This point is, as will be seen from the Rigal deed, “at a beech in said Hammons’ upper corner,” and it is the contention of the defendant that this point is at the termination of the fifth call of the Banks deed running from the poplar and lyrm corner north 87, east 40 poles to a beech, and this beech corner constituted ‘ ‘ said Ham-mons ’ upper comer; ’ ’ while it is the contention of plaintiffs that the “beech in said Hammons’ upper corner,” constituting the beginning point of the description in the Rigal deed, is located something like 100 poles from the poplar and lynn corner and on a bearing of about north 35 degrees -east from it. So that to reach the point contended for by appellants, as being the beginning beech comer of the Rigal deed, the fifth call in the Banks deed, instead of reading as above, would have to read: “Thence north 35 -east 100 poles to a beech;” and to thus locate the beginning corner of the Rigal deed would make the tract of land conveyed by Riga! to Hammons contain, instead of 100 acres, something like 150 acres. It would furthermore leave a strip of land between the Banks tract conveyed to Hammons in 1824, and the tract conveyed by the Rigal deed to Hammons in 1830, which is contrary to the plain intention manifested by the Rigal deed when, in the third call thereof, it runs “80 poles back to Hammons,” and in' the fourth call, “from that point to the beginning,” which is the “beech” in said “Hammons’ upper corner;” for, there is nowhere shown that Hammons ever had by any conveyance any upper beech corner except the one located “north 87 degrees east 40 poles from the poplar and lynn corner” in the Banks deed.

It is the well settled rule that in construing deeds and in locating lines and corners in the description of the land conveyed courses and distances surrender to natural objects. Devlin on Deeds, section 1029; Dupoy[603]*603ster v. Miller, 160 Ky., 780. Bat, for this rule to find application, the natural object mentioned in the deed must first be definitely located, and where there is a dispute as to the location of this natural object and the proof shows two or more natural objects which might fill the designation that one is to be accepted which appears to carry out the intention of the parties in making the deed and which most nearly conforms to the courses and distances, as well as conforms to the quantity of land proposed to be conveyed. There is some testimony in behalf of plaintiffs tending to show that Peter Ham-mons claimed his upper beech comer (being the beginning corner of the Eigal deed) to be located at the point contended for by them; but this testimony rests entirely in parol and to so locate that comer would not only do violence to the manifest intention of the parties to the Eigal deed, wherein it is to be gathered therefrom that the last call should be in the line of Peter Hammons’, but it would also be doing violence to the other calls in that deed and result in conveying at least 50 per cent, more land than therein expressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 859, 168 Ky. 599, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-parrott-kyctapp-1916.